Notre Dame coach Mike Brey received a new 10-year contract that will keep him as the Fighting Irish head coach through the 2021-22 season, the school announced Tuesday.

Terms of the deal were not announced.

Entering his 13th season at Notre Dame, Brey is 260-132 with the Irish and was named Big East coach of the year in 2007, 2008 and 2011. His 12 Notre Dame teams have each reached the postseason, including eight NCAA Tournament appearances.

The Fighting Irish have won at least 21 games in each of the past six seasons and reached the NCAA Tournament in five of those and the NIT semifinals in the other.

“As I have said on many occasions throughout my time here at Notre Dame, I am both honored and humbled to be the head coach at this very special place,” Brey said. “When I took the job here nearly 13 years ago, I felt that this could be a place where I could retire from coaching. With the terms of this new contract, I certainly intend for it to be my last coaching stop.”

Brey’s team in 2010-11 finished 27-7, making it Notre Dame’s winningest squad in the modern era, and finished ranked in the top 10 for the first time since 1981.

“Mike Brey epitomizes all that a university like ours hopes for in a coach,” Notre Dame athletic director Jack Swarbrick said Tuesday at a press conference. “He has built a winning program without ever compromising his values, and he develops players both on and off the court as well as anyone in the country.

“Mike is a true coach-educator. The genuine and unique relationships that he has with his players, our community and his colleagues in college basketball have built a great foundation for the future of our basketball program. This new contract, and particularly its length, is a reflection of our commitment to Mike and his commitment to Notre Dame.”

Prior to arriving at Notre Dame, Brey spent eight seasons as an assistant for Duke’s Mike Krzyzewski and then five seasons as head coach at Delaware, where he went 99-52 and reached the NCAA Tournament twice.